Author Topic: What does Burke drive? Andrew Vachss - Mopar nut  (Read 564 times)

Offline Ornamental

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What does Burke drive? Andrew Vachss - Mopar nut
« on: December 13, 2007 - 12:48:23 PM »
Are there any Andrew Vachss fans here?
If so, you've probably noticed by now that he seems to be a big Mopar-lover.
I read most of his books before I got the Moparalis Monomanis syndrome, and at the time I read them, I didn't think much about it when his caracters often had the good fortune to drive cars like Chargers, 'Cudas, Challengers, or Roadrunners, and Hemi's were mentioned from time to time. But after widing'cuda got his Charger, I got a much better connection to the cars he wrote about. And after I became the care-giver of a '72 Challenger Rallye, I really could appreciate that one of my favorite authors is a Mopar nut!

Here's an excerpt from his website:
Quote from: —excerpted from Only Child by Andrew Vachss
By then, the Porsche was all pieced out. And I was driving my barter, a 1969 Plymouth two-door post that had gone through half a dozen life changes since it rolled off the assembly line as a Roadrunner. Its last owner obviously had been in the long-haul contraband business. The beast's undercarriage was a combination of an independent-rear-suspension unit pirated from a Viper, and subframe connectors with heavy gussets to stiffen the unibody—and let it survive a pretty good hit, too. Huge disks with four-piston calipers all around, steel-braided lines. The cavernous trunk had plenty of room, despite housing a fuel cell and the battery, but I didn't find the nitrous bottle I'd expected. Maybe that was because a 440 wedge, hogged out to 528 cubes, sat under the flat, no-info hood. I'd balked when Lymon first told me it was a crate motor, but he'd jumped all over my objections, taking it personally. Lymon's a car guy first; thieving's just his hobby.

"That motor ain't from the Mopar factory, man," he said, contempt cutting through his Appalachian twang. "Al deKay himself built this one." I knew who he meant—a legendary Brooklyn street-racer, rumored to have switched coasts. "You got yourself an MSD ignition and a brand-new EFI under there," he preached. "NASCAR radiator plus twin electric fans, oil and tranny coolers—this sucker couldn't overheat in the Lincoln Tunnel in rush hour. In July. Reliable? Brother, we're running an OEM exhaust system, H-piped, through a pair of old Caddy mufflers. Costs you a pack of ponies, but it's as quiet as a stocker with those hydraulic lifters. This piece, boy, you don't need to even know a good wrench—you want, you could ****ing weld the hood shut."

It was tall-geared, running a 3.07 rear end—which Lymon proudly gushed was "full cryo" while I pretended I knew what he was talking about—and a reworked Torqueflitte off a column shifter.

Oil-pressure and water-temp gauges had been installed in the dash slot that formerly housed the pitiful little factory tach. The replacement tach, one of those old black-faced jobs, was screw-clamped to the steering column, with a slash of bright orange nail polish at the 6000 shift point.

The bucket seats had an armrest between them that you could pull up to sit three across in a pinch. What you couldn't see was the chromemoly tubing that ran from the rocker sills through the B-pillars right up under the headliner to form a rollover hoop.

The windows had a tint that looked like Windex hadn't touched the glass for years. The outside lamps of the quad headlights had been converted to xenon high-lows, like switching a cigarette lighter for a blowtorch. The inside units were actually aircraft landing lights, but you'd have to be close enough to notice the nonserrated clear glass with the telltale dot in the center to tell.

No power windows, no air conditioning. The radio was the original AM/FM. If I wanted tape or CD, I'd have to bring a portable with me when I rode.

From the outside, it looked like different things to different people. To a rodder, it would look like a restoration project—the beginning of the project, with the Roadrunner's trademark "meep-meep" horn more hope than promise. To anyone else, it looked like a typical white-trash junker, just fast enough to outrun the tow truck. Steel wheels, sixteen-inchers all around, shod in Dunlop run-flats, with dog-dish hubcaps on three of them.

Rusted-out rocker panels. A dented grille hid the cold-air ducting on either side of the radiator. Steering wheel wrapped in several layers of padded white tape. The front end was all primer, the rear the original red, since gone anemic. The left tailpipe was trimmed so that it looked like a replacement mill—probably a tired 318—was providing the power.

It looked right at home on the patch of dirt that would have been the front lawn if the house we'd rented had been in a better neighborhood.


I've underlined the text about "life changes" and "B-pillars" because at the first time I read it, the "life changes" part didn't really stick in my head, so I was like WTF about B-pillars in a Roadrunner?!?
But in context, I interpret the text like that should be credited to the "life changes" of a sleeper smuggler car.
Panther Pink '72 Challenger Rallye.
Grey '70 Challenger R/T

-There are two kinds of pedestrians: The quick and the dead.

***Per Arne***




Offline 71bigblock

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Re: What does Burke drive? Andrew Vachss - Mopar nut
« Reply #1 on: December 13, 2007 - 01:02:49 PM »
Very very good description, I can see it in my head.  Problem is, I want to see it for real!   :hyper: